Thank you, dear
bunnyhugger.
Turns out I can carry on something that resembles a normal week on my humor blog if I pack it with reprinted material. I'll accept that. Run over there this past week have been:
- MiSTed: Reboot: Breaking the Barriers (Part 13 of 16)
- You can get Amid Amidi's _Cartoon Modern_ for free now
- Statistics Saturday: Some Ways To Spend November
- Reposted: The 41st Talkartoon: Admission Free, a cartoon that jumps the tracks
- Reposted: Walking Through Novel-Writing
- What's Going On In Rex Morgan, M.D.? What was Jordan's deal in the Army? August - November 2021
- And now with the flowers
- MiSTed: Reboot: Breaking the Barriers (Part 14 of 16)
And now, let's move on to some carved pumpkins.
And now the jack-o-lanterns move into dinosaurs.
Footprints and bones in the pumpkins, alongside the full skeletons.
And here's the skeleton of a coati walking backwards, always glad to see.
Really impressed with the way this figure conveys arms reaching past the spotlight.
They had a ``selfie station'' so of course we used it wrong.
Aw, a cute little Hello Kitty pumpkin.
And oh, it's ... uh ... beloved animation character ``that character that I glance at and see Rocky the Flying Squirrel but it's actually something from something that came out in the last half-century instead''!
Joe Cool beside a pumpkin that's really got the look of a Chalres Schulz jack-o-lantern.
And here's a quick glance back at the way we'd come. The tree with all those lanterns is in the background.
Trivia: A brochure published by the International Harvester Company in the 19th century, to teach the Polish immigrants newly working for it English, began with the phrase ``I hear the whistle, I must hurry''. Subsequent phrases were ``I hear the five-minute whistle'', ``It is time to go to the shop'', and ``I take my check from the gateboard and hang it on the department board''. Source: The Age of Capital, 1845 - 1875, Eric Hobsbawm.
Currently Reading: Rocket Girl: The Story of Mary Sherman Morgan, America's First Female Rocket Scientist, George D Morgan. Very surprised to see a scene with Mary Sherman set in the Sandusky public library, although it's probably too much to hope to learn her thoughts about Cedar Point. George Morgan does find, and print, a letter from 1944 about something it'd make sense to be kept secret, though, so at least there's a trail of evidence about some of this.